"Depending on who you place in the same situation, the characteristics of said incident change kaleidoscopically. In other words, there is one incident. However, there are as many stories explaining it as there are people involved in it."

—Gustav St. Germain

In prohibition-era America, a cacophony of stories stirs. Thieves, terrorists, mafia gangsters, and other elements of pulp fiction collide in a chaos of intrigue and violence. When a hapless alchemist creates an elixir of life that can confer immortality, a series of incredible events follow that spiral out of control, touching upon the lives of an enormous cast of characters.

Baccano![1] originally started as a series of light novels (summarized here, with links to translations on the same page), and was adapted into a 13-episode anime (16 including the bonus episodes) in 2007. The anime adaptation is centered on three specific stories from the novels, taking place in 1930, 1931, and 1932 respectively, jumping around from one to the other quite frequently. Even scenes set in the same time period regularly appear out of order and overlap with each other, all adding up to a rather delicious non-linear storyline that is very rewarding if you keep your wits about you when watching. Each of these stories relates either directly or tangentially to the immortality formula and those individuals who have drunk of it, sharing some characters and having some plotlines intersect. Three extra episodes were released with the DVD, acting as an epilogue for each character and bringing the story full circle.

The 1930 story stars Firo Prochainezo, a rising member of the Martillo camorra family. Through a chance encounter with a mysterious young woman, he and several other characters are pulled into a plot involving a group of alchemists in a centuries-old conflict over the fabled elixir of life.

In 1931, disaster befalls the famed Flying Pussyfoot transcontinental train as it makes its journey from San Francisco to New York. A terrorist/cult group known as the Lemures seek to use the train's passengers, including a US Senator's wife and daughter, as leverage to demand the release of their leader, Huey Laforet. Meanwhile, a gang of killers lead by the Russo family assassin Ladd Russo are trying to hold the train hostage to demand ransom from the train company. Caught in the middle is a group of delinquents originally attempting a train heist, who take it upon themselves to save the passengers. And amidst all this, a terrifying blood-red "monster" called the Rail Tracer has begun to murder people all over the train...

1932 deals with Eve Genoard, searching for her older brother Dallas following his disappearance after the events of the 1930 story. She soon becomes entangled in the rivalry between the Runorata and Gandor families, both of which also have an interest in her brother.

The extra DVD episodes continue off right where the 1932 story ends time-wise, and focus primarily on the arrival of Graham Spector, a friend of Ladd Russo's, as he seeks revenge for what happened aboard the Flying Pussyfoot. This arc also acts as an epilogue for the series, showing what happens to nearly all the characters while also filling in on some backstories and answering a few lingering questions.

The novels are formatted a little different than the animation as each book covers one major event. While they have not been written in chronological order, most books are best defined by the year they take place. Most books center on a single character or a small group of characters as a focal point for the story.

Baccano! is part of an overarching Verse of light novels written by Narita Ryohgo that includes the following:

Acting Unnatural: On at least two occasions, Isaac advises Miria that the two of them should act casual to avoid suspicion. Isaac and Miria's idea of "acting casual" inevitably makes about as much sense as anything else they do - which is to say, none.

Actually, I Am Him: Played straight in one of the early novels where it is revealed that Firo is the narrator.

Adorkable Jacuzzi definitely, and even Claire has his moments, especially around Chane

Adaptation Distillation: The manga, first by being officially just an adaptation of the Grand Punk Railroad arc, so it really couldn't go further than that with the same print; then it took some liberties like having an original design for Placido Russo, as Narita didn't think of using him for greather purposes at the time, and killing him off right in the begining; Ladd's design greatly differs from Enami's original one even by Depending on the Artist standards, and pretty much all characters from The Rolling Bootlegs are Demoted to Extra as they have no real participation in The Grand Punk Railroad arc, basically cutting the all-popular cast in half.

Adaptation Dye Job: Katsumi Enami had some... unique ideas for what color to use for some characters, whereas the anime tried to keep realistic tones.

In the first volumes Ladd was a blonde with a very weak paste tone that could be mistaken for white hair. In Alcatraz it became completely white. The anime went for normal blonde; later Enami would even things out by drawing Ladd like he was animated.

Claire's eyes are usually shown as golden in the novels, matching perfectly with Chane. One piece of art for the 1931 arc shows him with red eyes. The anime went for normal brown eyes.

Enami has drawn Chane with a much more pale skin tone than is typical for her presumed ancestry; the anime is consistent with it.

Affectionate Gesture to the Head: After thinking that he is going to die, Czeslaw gets a pat on the head from Maiza instead of having his life force sucked from him as he'd expected. This, along with the love that Isaac and Miria had shown him, leads to his breaking free from his past woes.

Alchemy Is Magic: Alchemy in this series allows the summoning of demons and was able to produce the Elixir of Life. Lampshaded by Szilard Quates, who's angry about the divorce from science, declaring that demon-summoning is not alchemy and complaining that devouring disregards conservation of mass.

All Myths Are True: The Rail Tracer. Actually subverted: The Rail Tracer we see is just what you get when you let somebody as crazy as Claire Stanfield have fun with an urban legend.

Fridge Brilliance makes it better when you remember who started the Rail Tracer rumours in the first place after Isaac and Miria tell it to Jacuzzi, one of the chefs mentions, "That young conductor" had been telling the story for a while. Conclusion: Claire Stanfield invented his own urban legend.

All Part of the Show: Isaac and Miria manage to convince themselves that the entire plot of The Slash, including Ronnie showing off his demon mojo and a number of bloody murders, is an elaborate and awesome magic show.

All There in the Manual: While the anime is generally self-contained and understandable without the Light Novels, there's still quite a bit of backstory that doesn't find its way into the show -- as well as the unanswered question of just who were those people who sliced up Isaac's ear in the first episode. And of course, if you want to know what happens after the anime events...

All There Is to Know About "The Crying Game": It's pretty much impossible to talk about Claire Stanfield without spoiling a hell of a lot of the 1931/Grand Punk Railroad arc. Of course, he's also one of the most popular characters in the series, and the Railroad arc is one of the most popular arcs, so nearly any conversation on Baccano! invariably will result in massive spoilers. The fandom usually refers to him as The Young Conductor before his reveal, and treats him like two different characters before and after.

The Alcatraz: The Alice in Jails / Peter Pan in Chains arc, featuring the Alcatraz, natch.

Ambition Is Evil: Szilard and Huey can be argued under this to explain why they turned out to be such monsters.

Anachronic Order: The first episode actually contains scenes from the endings to each of the three stories. Later episodes will jump back and forth between and even within the separate stories with little warning.

Analogy Backfire: Note to Isaac and Miria -- Al Capone is not a good benchmark for personal success. Yet strangely, it is more sensible than nearly everything else that comes out of their mouths.

Sliding Scale of Anti-Heroes: Baccano! characters seem to more or less run the gamut between Type I or Type II (arguably, Isaac and Miria) through to Type V (the Rail tracer). The most common types seem to be Types III-V, however.

As You Wish: Both in-world and meta -- Claire reveals to Rachel that he's the Rail Tracer by commenting on her train ticket purchases. For the meta-example, it's heavily implied that Ronnie is the demon summoned aboard the Advena Avis (and later confirmed) when he uses the same Catch Phrase/Verbal Tic.

Awesome McCoolname: Can't go wrong with a name like Jacuzzi Splot. Also Luck Gandor, Nice Holystone and Czeslaw Meyer. Those are some pretty great names as well. Szilard Quates. Ladd Russo has a pretty nice ring to it too.

Backstory: The episode taking place in 1711 on the Advena Avis. The novels go further with two books taking place before 1711 with those characters.

Baddie Flattery: The more Ladd employs this with you, the more he wants to kill you.

Bait and Switch Credits: The intro is a good showcase of the show's light-hearted tone and high energy. It does not, however, display much hint of the amount of Gorn, gang violence, and overall insanity some of the audience might have wanted to look out for.

Czeslaw has these moments as he questions if what happened to him on the Flying Pussyfoot was justice for him having killed his abusive guardian after a couple hundred years of torture. Nearly eighty years later he still questions if he is evil or if he is worthy of love.

Best Served Cold: In the 2001 novel it is revealed that Sylvie drank the elixir solely so that she could eat Szilard one day. She waited until she was older to drink it so that he wouldn't recognize her when she attacked him.

Beyond the Impossible: The rules of Immortality are spelled out and fixed but Fermet has defied one of the biggies. Namely that being eaten by another alchemist is the only way they can die. He's recovered from it twice.

Also, Claire Stanfield. He thinks he's God, and considering the stuff he does he may not be too far off the mark.

Given the whole setting of the story, it could be argued that nearly every character is a Pro- and An- tagonist at exactly the same time, depending on who is the current "main character" of the story.

Blessed with Suck: Drug & the Dominoes character Roy Maddock is "blessed" with hypersensitivity to most drugs. Specifically, all the effects of the drug hit him twice as hard. Fun times.

Blood Lust: More than one character spends large portions of the show drenched in blood. One dances in glee over it.

Book Ends: Depending if you're going by the ending of the series proper or the bonus episodes, either the two scenes at the train station or the two conversations between St. Germain and Carol.

Boom! Headshot!: No fewer than ten in the anime, and at least as many in the novels. Only a few of them actually take. And not only guns given there are quite a few instances where a similar effect is created with a knife through the skull.

Break the Cutie: If you are young and innocent in this work, you will fall under this trope. Czes, Eve, Mary, Sylvie and Gretto anyone?

Brooklyn Rage: Considering that many of the characters come from New York, and they're all badasses...

Call Back: Given the number of books in the series (over a dozen now) and the span of time that has been covered (1705 to 2002 at this time), the books do make multiple mentions to events mentioned in previous books as offhand mentions, Running Gag, or as expanded plots.

Click. "Hello.": Not surprisingly there are several instances. Luck Gandor pulls a classic one on Dallas Genoard, and the entire staff of the Daily Days newspaper do one en masse to a pair of Runorata goons who try to threaten Nicholas.

Compressed Adaptation: the anime is loosely based after 4 Baccano! Light Novels: The Rolling Bootlegs, The Grand Punk Railroad - Local Episode, The Grand Punk Railroad - Express Episode and Drug & The Dominos. The three extra episodes are based on the mini-novel/CD-drama, Great Punk Railroad Revisited.

Continuity Cameo: In 2002, Bride mentions a certain Orihara who will take care of corpse disposal for them in Shinjuku.

Continuity Nod: The novels do this on multiple occasions. Makes sense with the number of books that cover just shy of 300 years chronologically.

Covers Always Lie: The mini-novels which came with each Original Japanese DVD Volume for the anime; the covers portrays well known members of the cast in each one of them: Graham, Elmer, Tick, Maria, Ricardo and Melody. The actual storyline contained in these novels are side-stories featuring a whole new cast 30' with little to no relation to the main cast. The regular members of the cast are Demoted to Extra and to One-Scene Wonder.

Crazy Enough to Work: Issac and Miria's escapades almost always fall under this. Refuge in Audacity allows them to get away with their crimes because they are beyond believable, and that when civilians notice their crimes, they usually think they're actors pulling a publicity stunt

Cue the Sun: After her victory over Adelle, Maria thrusts one of her swords in the air, and the clouds part as if she cut them herself to reveal the sun. As it turns out, Ronnie was feeling a bit theatrical that day. ("Think of it as congratulations.")

A Day in the Limelight: That's basically how the introductory chapters often works in the novels. Narita will Info Dump about a given subject, situation, or a character for the current arc, with another character narrating and interacting through the whole chapter. This is where Narita conveys how the narrator feels about the situation, their mannerisms, speech pattern and so on; making it a quick way to know the cast.

Decoy Protagonist: Played with in the anime. Carol says Firo's the main character because he's "lead character-ish." Good luck trying to prove her right or wrong.

Devil in Disguise: Ronnie Sukiart is the demon who gave the alchemists immortality taken human form.

Did Not Do the Research: Many obscure things in Baccano! are actually quite well-researched, but no one's perfect...

A few of the seemingly Foreign Sounding Gibberish names are real European names, but the dubbers didn't research how to pronounce them.

Czeslaw: Polish, properly pronounced CHESS-wahf.

Szilard: Hungarian, pronounced SEE-laurd.

Isaac and Miria routinely demonstrate their in-universe research failure, such as when Isaac identifies Billy the Kid as the hero of the Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Though its only a minor detail in the first episode, depression-era American meal centers clearly served curry and rice. Soup kitchens are lies.

Another minor one: The novels at one point incorrectly say talkies and vitaphones are the same thing. It's kind of like getting songs mixed up with iPods - A talkie is a movie with synchronized sound, and Vitaphone was the sound system used to play talkies.

Despite the events primarily taking place in the early 1930s, the opening theme is bebop, a subgenre of jazz that did not exist until the 1940s.

1931 -- On a train! With three gangs hijacking at the same time, two serial killers, and three immortals! You almost forget hostages are involved, sometimes.

2002 -- On two luxury cruises! With one Cult kidnapping women for their purposes and hijacking one of the ships, one group of assassins getting in their way and hijacking the other ship, and seven immortals on board, two of whom are on their honeymoon. This time the hostages are barely mentioned at all.

Dumb Muscle: Subverted - Donny, while the largest and strongest of Jacuzzi's crew, is arguably the smartest - he comes from Mexico and therefore speaks at least two languages (Spanish and English). He also never shows signs of below-average intelligence during the series.

Engrish: Impressively averted. Despite taking place in America, the show is mostly devoid of this, with signs and background elements almost always spelled correctly, a sign that the creators did their homework. Nobody's perfect, though; note "Grando" Central Station.

Eternal Love: More than one couple counts, but Isaac and Miria are a good example.

Even Evil Has Standards: The organized crime families that the protagonists are a part of usually have lines that they will not cross. Mafioso Keith Gandor, for example, absolutely loathes drug trafficking and has forbidden it entirely from his clan's territory. His brothers are less fierce about it, but they still don't like it.

Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": The long-faced Gandor Family enforcer turned Daily Days flunky with the ever-present box of sugar cubes is never referred to by name until the last episode - when the Daily Days editor refers to him as Kakuzatou-kun (Mr. Sugarcube).

Evil Versus Evil: The 1705 incident is explicitly described as such, with the drug dealers among the commoners of Lotto Valentino, the corrupt police, the aristocrats that buy and sponsor the drugs, including Maiza's father, the masked counterfeiter, and the Mask Maker.

Exactly What It Says on the Tin: Most episode titles are pretty clear concerning what they're about, such as "The Rail Tracer Maneuvers Through the Train Slaughtering Many."

The fourth episode title describes one of the show's lovable psychopaths: "Ladd Russo Enjoys Talking A Lot and Slaughtering A Lot."

The author's preferred translation of baccano is "stupid commotion" which is an adequate summary of the plot. The semi-interlacing plot lines do look a lot like a "stupid commotion" for the first few episodes before all the pieces start falling into place.

Fan Service: For a anime that has NOTHING to do with this trope, at least a couple of scenes of fanservice appeared.

The first being where on the train,Jacuzzi and Donny run into Isaac and Miria, trip on something and then Jacuzzi lands on her cleavage due to everyone being crowded together.

The 2nd is when the Chinese girl stops Isaac from looking in the bullet holes, she trips and her breasts go on him face first. Also, many of the scenes with the Chinese girl like to show her butt.

Then there's the fact that, if you look really closely, Nice, Chane, and Lua all seem to be Going Commando.

Fantastic Science: Both Szilard and Huey spent a ton of time figuring out how alchemy and immortality work.

Fate Worse Than Death: Some of the characters are immortal and can regenerate any wound, but can still feel pain. This leads to some pretty gruesome, if unique, ways of torture.

Particularly notable is the fate of Dallas and his crew at the end of the 1930 storyline; given Cement Shoes and thrown in the Hudson River to drown for decades on end. They get rescued after a couple of years, but even a couple years of that is horribly traumatic.

Fingore: As early as the first episode, right after Firo's introduction his fingers are sliced off. The Rail Tracer likes to grind victims' fingers and hands into the ground beneath the speeding train, and even chews them off one victim.

Foregone Conclusion: By the first episode, you will know that Luck and Firo become immortal, Isaac, Miria, Jacuzzi, Nice, and Czeslaw survive the Flying Pussyfoot massacre, Ladd loses an arm, and Chane accepts Claire's proposal... Or perhaps not, because you're not given any context for it until you see the rest of the show.

Thanks to the 2002 novels, we know that in 1710, Monica will be killed by Fermet.

Framing Device: The anime's is the conversation between Gustav St. Germain and Carol and their attempt to piece together the three stories. The novels use these as well, but the device is different for each story.

1930 arc: A Japanese tourist is told the story by the Martillo Family's conta è oro.

1934 arc: Sham, Gustav St. Germain, and Huey's researcher Salomé Carpenter respectively recount the events of books 8 through 10 to the Daily Days, Hilton, and an information broker.

2001 arc: Felt tells the story to Isaac and Miria. Narration by Phil is also included.

1710 arc: A young man reads the accounts of Jean-Pierre Accardo, a poet who was deeply involved with the 1710 incident.

Freeze-Frame Bonus: During Chane and Ladd's second fight atop the train, after Chane is kicked off, as she is climbing back up, there is a shot of her bare hand holding one knife, but as soon as she is back up, her gloves are back on both her hands.

Funny Background Event: If you look closely at the card game in Episode 10 you'll notice that the Gandor brothers are playing Old Maid.

Futureshadowing: The entire first episode of the anime is this. It won't make sense until the second time you watch it.

Gambit Pileup: The train storyline includes a group of terrorists who wanted to hold a train and two important passengers hostage, not knowing that one of their number intends to sabotage this scheme (he in turn doesn't know that they were waiting for a chance to off him), a bunch of mafia-affiliated psychos who want to kill half the passengers and get the railroad to pay a ransom for the rest, a small but armed gang of delinquents who plan to rob the passengers, an immortal who decides the only way to protect himself is to have enough people killed that he can figure out who else on the train is immortal and kill them first, a pair of robbers making their getaway, and of course, the murderous Rail Tracer. Oh, and a reporter. Unfortunately for them, all of them chose the same train.

Gangsterland: Everyone in the cast is either a gangster or connected to one. The plots revolve around bootlegging, hijacking, and gore. The mobsters themselves don't really fit the trope though.

Gender Neutral Writing: In 1931 - The Grand Punk Station: Local Episode, Firo, Berga, and Luck never refer to Claire's gender when talking to Ennis about him.

Generation Xerox: Charon and Claudia Walken act a lot like gender-swapped versions of their paternal great-grandparents, Chane Walken and Claire StanfieldFelix Walken -- although Firo claims that Charon's quietness and stoicism is actually a product of hanging out with Keith Gandor for entirely too long.

The 2002 story invokes this, with the culprit behind the incident claiming that he wants to recreate the events of the Flying Pussyfoot Massacre in 1931. It fails, and it's implied to have been because the culprit didn't take into account the roles Isaac and Miria played in 1931.

Fingore: You have to wonder just what Ryohgo Narita has against fingers, given the number of times they're utterly maimed in this series.

Czes more or less exists to be the victim of the show's gorn. More than one character spends a large portion of their screen time covered in blood. Ladd's crew specifically wear clean white suits so the ensuing bloodstains are more noticeable.

Gory Discretion Shot: As the above indicates, a good bit of the gore is actually shown, but the Gory Discretion Shot still sees some use - for example, when the Gandor brothers are shot in the head near the end of the series.

Happily Ever Before: The 1710 book has a variation. The accounts of the poet Jean-Pierre cut off at the so-called happy ending, but the reader then discovers the hidden continuation of his accounts, which detail the Diabolus Ex Machina and the Downer Ending of the story.

Healing Factor: People who drank the "incomplete" Elixir of Life, such as Dallas and his thugs.

Hermetic Magic: Maiza and the 1711 group called it 'alchemy', but it is more appropriately this trope, as they summoned a demon.

I Cannot Self-Terminate: Immortals have to have another immortal "eat" them if they want to die. Maiza asks Firo to do this to him at the end of The Rolling Bootlegs. Firo gives a number of bullshit reasons for why he won't before finally admitting that he'd hate to lose him.

Identity Absorption: All immortals have the ability to do this to other immortals. In the novels, "water" beings have the potential to do this to anyone who ingests their "water", although they run the risk of falling victim to it themselves.

That's an interesting example, since the waitress clearly knew that was the area that gets shot at pretty often (note the bullet holes) and was trying to keep people away.

Also interesting in that the shot actually missed Isaac. Miria is just overdramatic that way.

Immortality: Obviously, of the Type III variety. Type II is introduced in the later novels as well.

Immortality Begins At Twenty: Averted, as everyone who drinks the immortality potion is frozen at that age but enforced by Sylvie, who receives the potion as a teenager but deliberately waits until she's in her twenties to drink it.

Immortality Seeker: The entire premise behind the original 1711 immortals. After a couple hundred years, the wisdom of this is questioned to say the least.

This only applies to the originals. The rest of them ended up immortal by pure dumb luck.

Immortal Life Is Cheap: Most immortal characters die horribly at one point or another, some of them multiple times.

Immortal Procreation Clause: Averted, as immortals are no less fertile than any normal human. The catch is that the resulting children aren't immortal. Huey actually had kids to test both this and whether Lamarck Was Right.

In the Back: At the end of the 1930 arc, Ennis stabs Szilard in the back, literally and figuratively. The moral outrage normally associated with this trope is ameliorated by the fact that he totally deserved it.

Innocent Cohabitation: At the end of The Grand Punk Station, the Gandors mention that Firo and Ennis have been living together for about a year without so much as a close-mouthed kiss. Claire briefly wonders if Firo's even human after hearing about it.

This trope is lampshaded by Nick, after Nice mentions that it's the first time that Jacuzzi had kissed her in the 10 years she's known him.

"Geeze, being a gentleman is one thing, but that's just stupid!"

Insane Troll Logic: Graham sends a note to Jacuzzi's gang, telling him to come alone. So the entire gang shows up individually, claiming they all came alone. Graham, as the resident Fauxlosophic Narrator, considers this perfectly reasonable.

Insistent Terminology: Maiza and Firo - in the novels, at least - would like to remind you that they're part of the Camorra, not the Mafia. The anime also explicitly mentions the Martillo family as belonging to the Camorra.

Edward: You think everyone’s happy getting your hard-earned dirty money?Firo: So you're saying donating to public funds or charity organizations is a better system, aren’t you? No one checks who's donating or what kind of money it is.
Firo didn't deny the accusation of "dirty money".

Jack the Ripper: Issac uses the name as an alias in one episode.... or tries to after his first alias went over everyone's head as well.

Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: The framing device for the anime is Carol trying to put all the pieces together.

Katanas Are Just Better: Subverted in Drug & The Dominos. Katanas? Cool. A pair of scissors in the hands of everyone's favorite psycho, Claire Stanfield? Better.

This is Maria's position in-universe. Which is why she uses two of them, amigo!

Knife Fight: And a damned cool one at that. It gets reenacted at cons a lot.

The Last Horse Crosses the Finish Line: At least in the anime, despite being present during a huge explanation about how people came to be immortal, and sharing in the elixir itself, it wasn't until Isaac and Miria realized that they were immortal until they noticed that they had never aged a single day since the 1930s..... in year 2001. And even then, they never clicked it together just what had happened to make them that way.

Legacy Character: The name "Felix Walken" is passed down from one assassin to another. By 1934, it's shared between multiple people--Claire and five of Sham's bodies. Claire bought the name from a woman around 30 years old, and Sham's bodies were given the name by a man who now calls himself "The Former Felix Walken".

In Bloody to Fair, Dallas Genoard, of all people. Pretty much everyone in the cast (and audience) assume that Adelle is going to sweep him aside in the climax. Turns out he REALLY wasn't kidding about paying them back for threatening his sister.

Living Forever Is Awesome: In the opinion of Firo and the other 1930 immortals, although not all of the 1711 group would agree.

Loophole Abuse: Falsifying age is tricky business for an immortal (and requires a third party in high places), but possible. Firo, for example, has a passport that's entirely genuine (FBI Victor Talbot didn't want to deal with him getting detained for presenting a "fake" one again), but with a deliberate error in his date of birth.

Loads and Loads of Characters: The opening sequence ought to give you an idea. In ninety seconds, seventeen characters are deemed important enough to pause, zoom in on their faces one by one, and display their names.

Loveable Rogue: Quite a few of the characters, considering most are thieves, assassins, or mafia members.

Magic A Is Magic A: The rules of immortality are clearly defined, although some of them are rather odd.

Male Gaze: The first book has at least a paragraph lingering on Ennis's appearance, which is probably the first sign that the man telling the story isn't Maiza, but rather Ennis's eventual husband Firo. The anime is a bit more subtle about it, but Firo's first look at Ennis also starts with a shot of her chest.

Manly Tears: Parodied by Jacuzzi Splot. At first, this is just the signature of his 'crybaby personality'. During one flashback, however, it is revealed he does this DELIBERATELY, so that by the time he has to deal with a bad situation or crisis, he'll have cried his fears away and can get SERIOUSLY DANGEROUS.

Marshmallow Hell: Twice in the anime, both involving a male character tripping and falling onto a female character.

In 1930, Isaac trips and falls into the cleavage of an Alveare waitress, knocking her to the ground in the process.

In 1931, Jacuzzi and Donny collide with Isaac and Miria in a doorway and all four of them stuck. Jacuzzi, having grabbed Miria to keep from falling over, finds himself experiencing Marshmallow Hell after her dress rips in the process.

Mad Love: For Ladd and Lua, "I'll kill you last" is just as good as "I love you."

A Man Is Not a Virgin: Subverted, as Claire Stanfield, one of the biggest badasses in the series, is a total virgin by his own admission -- though not exactly by choice, mind you)

Claire: Don't say stupid things. I've never two-timed before, you know? Well, frankly, it's because I never dated a woman.

Marriage to a God: In the 2002 novel, a cult tries to force Sylvie to become their god and marry their leader.

Meet Cute: Firo and Ennis. Claire and Chane also have a brief but utterly adorable one in the manga.

Mercy Kill: In the epilogue of Drug & the Dominoes, Maiza contemplates killing the comatose Begg for this reason, but decides against it.

Mind Screw: There's guaranteed to be a few of these whenever Isaac and Miria are around.

Mook Horror Show: The Rail Tracer AKA Claire Stanfield does this with the Lemures and the Russo family.

Motivational Kiss: Inverted when Jacuzzi kisses Nice just before running off to confront an Ax CrazyMook with a Flamethrower. She admits that's the first time they kissed.

My Grandson, Myself: Averted. Part of the "no false names" contract puts a mental barrier against establishing any sort of false, long-term identity. Considering that they both became immortal before reaching the legal drinking age, both Firo and Luck must have a hell of a time trying to buy alcohol.

Nepotism: A unique take on the trope with Ladd. He's the nephew of the boss of the Russo family. He's not incompetent, just an Ax Crazy psycho, but this trope is fulfilled as his uncle gives him a job as a way of trying to channel his violence into a useful end.

This is also how Luck ended up as a Mafia executive while barely into his teens, and he's well aware of it.

Neighbourhood Friendly Gangsters: The profit aspect isn't really touched upon in the anime, but it's played with and lampshaded in the light novels. By 2002, the Martillos' Camorra business is second to the family's chain of Alveare restaurants.

Noodle Incident: Pretty much the only thing we know about Firo and Ennis's wedding is that it took place in a church circa 1980, there were Wedding Smashers, and that it ended in a bloodbath that is later fondly remembered by the Martillos.

Older Than They Look/Really Seven Hundred Years Old: To be expected in a series with immortals. Firo, pre-immortality, serves as the former, as -- both in and out of the series -- people usually underestimate his age (almost nineteen) by about three or four years.

One Steve Limit: Semi-averted with variations on a name. There's a trio and a pair of related names, although all belong to secondary or lesser characters: Gustav St. Germain (the vice-president of the Daily Days), Gustavo Bagetta (the mafioso who kidnaps Eve), and Goose (the leader of the black suits aboard the train); Nicholas Wayne (the information broker) and Nick (the blond member of Jacuzzi's crew).

Open the Door and See All the People: One of the delinquents walks into the buffet car armed with a knife. At the same time, representatives from the two groups of mobsters turn up with guns. He apologises and withdraws.

Out of the Inferno: In the 2001 novel, Czes escapes from a group of superstitious villagers who think immortals are demons by throwing himself into a fireplace, waiting for the ropes they've bound him with to burn off, and walking out of the flames, regenerating as he goes. Even more impressive when you recall that Fermet threw him into a fireplace at one point. Also a CMOA.

Paint the Town Red: More paint the train red in the 1931 arc with Ladd and the Rail Tracer, but plenty of other people are guilty of this in New York proper.

The books do this from time to time -- such as when Barnes' thoughts gradually shift from kanji to hiragana to demonstrate their degradation, or the fact that the epilogue is deliberately put before the story itself.

There's also an example in the show, where Claire explains that he sees himself as the only real person in the world, and everyone else is just an interesting character he thinks up. At this point, the audience sees things from his eyes, and the visual image is like an old movie projection.

The Power of Love: Subtly so, but in Baccano! even the most violent gang boss, vigilante, and serial killer is capable of deep, honest love. Such love, as shown with Ennis, Czeslaw, and Chane, can in turn make the coldest person show emotion.

The Power of Trust: In the 2001 novel, Czes is confused about whether humans are basically good or evil, and worries that he isn't deserving of the unconditional kindness that Maiza and the others have shown him. Elmer responds to this by grabbing Czes's right hand and putting it on his own head, saying something like, "If you were so evil you'd eat me right now, wouldn't you?" and tells Czes that he should quit worrying about it and be glad that he has people in his life who care about and trust him.

The later books have fun with it by putting Tick and Maria together. While they're both of them are physically adults, they both act like somewhat Axe Crazychildren. To Luck, seeing them together is like watching ten-year-olds trying to flirt.

Reckless Gun Usage: When the celebratory gun shot the head of the Martillo family fires is immediately met with "Oh my God, somebody just killed Isaac!" from the floor above (luckily, Isaac's Plucky Comic Relief status means it actually only went through the brim of his hat without touching him).

In 1930, the entire Martillo family appears to be summarily gunned down by Szilard. Imagine his surprise when they come after him. It gets lampshaded when Maiza is asked, "Hey, how come killin' us didn't make us dead?"

In 1931, Claire Stanfield.

In 1933, most of the Mist Wall victims, who turned out to have been incomplete immortals.

Refuge in Audacity: How Isaac and Miria do everything. Leaping out in front of a trio of tommy-gun-equipped thieves wearing a samurai helmet and an opera cloak and claiming loudly to be Professor Moriarty is just one example.

Religion of Evil: SAMPLE, a Cult that designates a child to be their "sacrificial god" and brutally tortures them, believing that the child is a scapegoat for all the pain that the believers themselves would normally go through. There are multiple branches, but the three most prominent are the ones that hijack the cruise ship Exit, the branch that Illness was "sacrificial god" of as a child, and a defunct 300-year old branch for which Elmer was the "sacrificial god" until 1700.

Retirony: Tony, killed just seconds after he announces his retirement, has to be a new record.

Retraux: Used briefly to give a look inside a character's head, and also often used in Funimation's promotion of the series.

Roaring Rampage of Revenge: Claire goes on one after discovering that one of the white-suits killed his conductor buddy, Tony, starting with the murderer and extending to pretty much anyone who's vaguely associated with said murderer. It also turns out that the huge bounty on Jacuzzi's head is a result of one of these after the Russo family killed eight of his friends.

Sacrificial Lamb: The hapless young train conductor from the opening sequence gets to be the first person killed on-screen in the story proper. Of course, he's actually Claire Stanfield, and not only does he survive, but he's behind the Rail Tracer murders all along.

Screw the Rules, I Have Connections: In 2001, the hidden village is able to exist unmolested by the authorities because of Szilard's connections being used by his descendents.

Almost the entirety of the Mask Makers in Bullet Garden and Blood Sabbath is composed of film buffs. This naturally leads to a lot of movie references, including an argument over who would be the Mr. Pink of the team.

The opening sequence, deemed one of the best in anime by many who saw it, is a 1930's style depiction of the first scene in Snatch.

Shown Their Work: Baccano! is pretty good about this. For example, it actually depicts the Hollywood sign saying "Hollywoodland," which is what it stated originally.

Rachel's scenes in the OVAs also take place in an easily recognizable Grand Central Station, right down to the doors.

Single-Target Sexuality: The common, not to say universal, trend in Baccano! appears to be pairing up with someone who compliments you in some way and then never feeling anything for anyone else ever again. Firo is a case in point.

Sir Not-Appearing-In-This-Trailer: Unlike every other character, Claire -- the friendly-looking young conductor is conspicuously not identified in the opening credits.

Some serious fridge brilliance ensues when you get to episode 9 and realize that Claire's been lurking in the opening all along.

Spell My Name with an "S": Any character not introduced in the opening credits? We can confidently assure you that no one can agree on how their names are spelled. Getting the correct name for the Gandor family Torture Technician, for example, is so much of an exercise in futility that you're better off not even bothering.

It's most probably spelled as 'Tick' since his little brother was named 'Tack' (an usual variant for 'Tock' in some languages) and their original family bussiness was clockmaking.

Spit Take: Firo does one in Bullet Garden when Isaac and Miria indirectly announce his virginity to everyone in the Alveare.

Ennis's being a homuculus (her image appears in a bottle of elixir; also, it's not too big of a spoiler, since we find out this fact on her second appearance or so) and Dallas's eternal drowning. You'd mistake it for a symbol, though.

Thanks to the Anachronic Order of the series, the attentive viewer will realize from the train station scene in the very first episode that Firo, Ennis, Maiza, Isaac, Miria, Czeslaw, and the Gandors will all survive their various ordeals none the worse for wear, and that Ennis and Firo will be together.

Aversion - Although the Young Conductor is featured among the mix of named characters in the opening, with the same amount of face time, he's not named. Although he is carrying a bottle of wine, or Vino

Steal the Surroundings: Doesn't happen onscreen, but Graham Spector's first reaction to hearing that some other gang of thieves might beat his own to looting Millionaire Row is to order his gang to start dismantling entire houses to find the safes and carry them back to their lair.

Strong Family Resemblance/Identical Grandson: Huey Laforet apparently has the strongest genes ever, given that his kids and even his great-great-grandson looks nearly identical to him. The exceptions are his great-great-granddaughter Claudia, who instead has a noticeable resemblance to her great-grandfather, Claire; and his descendant Luchino who looks exactly like Monica

Outside the Laforet family, Szilard has an identical great-great-grandson whom we meet in 2001.

Stock Footage: The entire Visual Novel based on the Great Punk Railroad arc for the Nintendo DS revolves around this, despite its possibilities to create many scenarions not seen in the anime nor the novels, all of the illustrations contained in the game are just still-frames from any scene in the anime; the result is the possibility to read something completely new but not see anything different.

In The Grand Punk Station: Express Episode, Rachel begs the Rail Tracer to take her life in exchange for stopping his rampage. The Rail Tracer casually tells her he was already done (as well as that he only killed the white and black suits), tosses her a train ticket, and goes on his merry way.

In The Slash: Bloody to Fair, Firo tells Christopher that, if he wants a hostage, he should take him instead of Jacuzzi. Unfortunately, Chris knew he was immortal and promptly shot the offer down.

In Another Junk Railroad, Jacuzzi offers the bounty on his head to Graham as the random money for Chane.

There Was a Door: Nice loves explosives. She takes this to extremes at one point, when a door is open and she blows it up anyway, just to make a dramatic entrance.

They Would Cut You Up: Subverted. Victor desperately wants to keep Huey out of the hands of the government and the Nebula corporation, but more out of fear that Huey will sway the would-be cutter-uppers to his side than out of any concern for Huey's well being. (Or so he says, anyway.)

Also subverted with Isaac and Miria: they mix with violent characters and seem likely to die. But instead end up immortal. They unwittingly drink the elixir of life, and neither of them ever get killed, so it takes them seventy years to realize they haven't aged a day.

Touched by Vorlons: The immortals from 1711 achieved their status by summoning a demon. The demon itself considers himself this as well.

Trademark Favorite Food: Sugar cubes, which practically define one of the background characters - he is only ever referred to by name as Mr. Sugarcube, and his only line of dialogue is "Want one?" when offering them to somebody.

Verbal Tic: The demon usually ends statements with "maa, ii," which translates to something like "Ah, never mind", "Well, whatever," or (in the dub) "Well, no matter". Funny that Ronnie seems to share it too...

The Verse: Baccano!, Vamp!, and Durarara!! are all set in the same universe, although due to being set in very different locations and time periods, there isn't too much overlap.

At the start of episode 8, a special FBI task force is created with the objective of capturing Issac and Miria. The feds are never seen or heard from again, although it's implied that most of them simply think the case is too stupid to investigate.

In the novels, the agents leading that task force are part of Victor Talbot's immortal-monitoring division. The members of the regular FBI, however, still don't see the point.

Averted with the actual mouse, who shows up in an early episode as a test subject for the Grand Panacea. He reappears at the very end of the final episode, now immortal.

Where Are They Now? Epilogue: The domino scene in the anime. Werid, because there's three more episodes, but they exclude all but Nice's gang and focus on other characters.

White Shirt of Death: Ladd and his pals decided it would be totally awesome to dress in bright white tuxedos for the sole purpose of getting them soaked in other people's blood. The first episode shows that this didn't go quite as planned...

Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Goose, thinking of himself as something as a gentleman, isn't comfortable with having his men give a rebelling female passenger, Nice, a full body search upon capture. This comes to bite him in the ass (which he admits) when it turns out that Nice was hiding fireworks under her clothes. Also, the Gandor brothers in Drug & The Dominos.

What the Hell, Hero?: One of the very few times Keith Gandor speaks in the entire series is when he calls out Claire Stanfield during the climax of Drug & The Dominos... And actually gets him to apologize. Maria is impressed enough that she switches sides.

We Have the Keys: In The Slash: Bloody to Fair, Claire is not happy to see Ennis waste all the time he spent lockpicking by kicking Mist Wall's front door off its hinges.

Year X: All side-stories aside Great Punk Railroad Revisited have vague dates, making it hard to properly place them in the timeline; 193X for A Man in The Killer and The Time Of the Oasis, ???? for The Illusional First and Last Episode. A Man in The Killer was later published as the 16th volume, with the year confirmed to be 1932.

You Kill It, You Bought It: When one immortal "eats" another, all the victim's knowledge and memories, reportedly including muscle memory, are transferred to the killer.

You Killed My Father: Subverted. Eve pulls the trigger on Gustavo once she finds out but Luck, trying to keep her hands clean from this nasty Mafia business, deflects the blast with his arm -- blowing it off -- and takes out Gustavo himself. With his own severed arm.

↑Note exclamation mark. Baccano is Italian for "ruckus" or "commotion"